Dominion Road Methodist Church

Dominion Road Methodist Church is an early 20th century Methodist Church located in Mount Eden, Auckland, New Zealand listed as a Category II building by Heritage New Zealand.

History
Originally the Primitive Methodists used a cottage run as a Sunday school for Church services. On the 2nd of December, 1896, a meeting of the local Primitive Methodist committee decided to erect a Church in the County of Eden area. After climbing Mount Eden on the 6th they found a suitable spot and decided it would become the location of their new Church. The land for the Church was donated by Thomas Hanson, a settler from Sunderland who would subdivide land and sell housing in Mount Eden. It was decided a Church 35 ft long and 22 ft wide, with a 14 ft high stud would be constructed. Messrs Sayer and Cook were paid ₤157 to build it. The price was on par with a typical house of the time. This Church would be opened on the 16th of May, 1897.

The Primitive Methodists would later unite with the Methodist Church in the Methodist Union of 1913 which was followed by the Methodist Union Act 1913. Due to the popularity of the Church, as well as of the nearby Wesleyan Church located on Mount Eden Road they would both remain separate; however, due to the renaming of Mount Roskill Road to Dominion Road in 1907 it was decided that the Church would be renamed to Dominion Road Church. Following the union it was proposed to build a brick Church for the congregation: all the Primitive Churches had been made of wood, whilst the main Methodist Church in Auckland, Pitt Street Church, was made of brick. In 1914 the old wooden Church was moved to make way for the new brick Church. Construction of this new Church began in 1915 under a design from White and Wiseman. Originally the Church was planned to have chairs but this was changed to pews as the First World War caused the price of chairs to go up. Originally planned to have seating for 350 worshipers the plan would end up only supporting 299. Completion was finished in either 1915 or 1916. There were plans for enlargement but these were never carried out.

During the war many young men were conscripted and died overseas. Lance Corporal Percy Watkinson of the 2nd Battalion, Cantbeury Regiment was the son of two congregation members who died during the war, at Passchendaele. His will stipulated that ₤200 of his insurance money be donated to the Church to help fund the building of a school hall for boys and young men. Following further funding the Church would construct the another hall for a young men's Bible class which would be named the Dominion Road Young Men's Institute. After 1947 this building would become the Church Parlour.

In 1922, to celebrate both the centenary of Methodism in New Zealand and to accommodate for increased demand for the Sunday school, it was decided that a new hall would be constructed. The hall had a roll for 400 students and was split between girls and boys, with separate entrances for each gender. The old building was taken to Waterview and as of 1997 was still in use. On the 12th of December 1925 the Methodist Centenary Hall was opened. This inauguration would be attended by not just senior Auckland Methodist ministers but also but also members of the Presbyterian, Baptist, Anglican, and Congregational Churches. One reverend travelled from Hastings to attend. The building was designed in a Gothic style by S.E. Chappell and cost an estimated ₤4950 to build.

Following the Second World War austerity had hit and people were parsimonious, despite this the Church purchased and renovated a villa at 5 Paice Avenue for ₤1225 to serve as a parsonage. The austerity measures of the New Zealand Government combined with the Parlour burning down on the 21st of February, 1950 caused financial difficulties for the Church. In 1951 the Church would split from the Pitt Street Church.

In October of 1976 the Church allowed the Tongan Fellowship to use the Church for services. During the 1981 Springbok Tour the Church took a view opposite to that of the Methodist Church and opposed the protests, although opinions in the Church were divided. In 1988 the Auckland Fellowship, a Fijian-Indian fellowship would start holding services.